I don't think mere development and progression is the same as needing a change of scenery. No doubt Naslund exploded a year or two after being traded but it's not like he was a bum in Pittsburgh.A couple more - Markus Naslund being dealt from Pittsburgh to Vancouver was a big boost in his career. Similarly, Danny Briere went from Coyote waiver bait to considerable success after moving from Phoenix to Buffalo in a trade for Chris Gratton.
How about Joffrey Lupul? Injured lots and slowing down with Anaheim in 2010. Gets traded to Toronto as purely a cap dump, with little to no expectation that he'd contribute much. He was an all-star the following year, ending the season over a point-per-game.
Sergei Samsonov is an example of bad and good change of scenery. He was productive with the Bruins and Oilers. Then came the bad change of scenery. He was lousy in MTL, and then so bad with Chicago that he went 24 games without a goal and then was demoted to the AHL. Then came the good change of scenery. He got dumped to Carolina and was immediately an impact guy again, scoring 32 points in 38 games and stayed a productive guy for 3 more years.
I don't think mere development and progression is the same as needing a change of scenery. No doubt Naslund exploded a year or two after being traded but it's not like he was a bum in Pittsburgh.
I will add these from the Penguins perspective:
Matt Niskanen - from the Gogo for Neal/Niskanen swap.
Jussi Jokinen - wasn't doing great in Carolina and found his way again in Pittsburgh.
Justin Schultz - pretty bad time in Edmonton, came to Pittsburgh and was more or less reborn.
Carl Hagelin - wasn't bad but Anaheim at the time was not a good fit. Found his way with the Penguins.
Trevor Daley - wasn't bad but he was garbage in Chicago.
Mike Matheson - wasn't going well for him in Florida and he rounded out well in Pittsburgh.
Patrick Sharp
Drafted in the 3rd round by the Flyers in 2001
Doesn't do much in his limited time there over 3 seasons:
66 games - 10 goals
Traded at age 24 to Chicago in December of 2005
-becomes an All-Star and Selke candidate
-key part of 3 cup wins
-fan favorite
-Seasons with 40, 38, 38, and 37 goals
He played 66 year he was trade with the Penguins, then got another 10 with Vancouver. He was a regular. The Penguins thought they lost toughness with the departure of Stevens and a few others and dealt from a position of strength. Naslund was typically on the third line with top 6 spot duty here and there.He was getting scratched as a Penguin. That wasn't development, that was escape.
Unfortunately, it was very short lived with Lupul. Just a very brittle guy. Too bad.
Am I missing something? Where did you get those goal totals? I don't think he's ever scored 40 goals....for that matter, he hasn't scored 38 or 37 goals either.
I'd have to give this some more thought. The Sharp example, could simply be natural progression vs. total change in career due to change in scenery, but same could be said for a lot. When he was traded to CHI, he had 5 goals and 8 points in 22 games....not far off of the 9 goals and 23 points he scored in 50 games with CHI. The following full season he had 20 goals and 35 points....very small improvement and then took a big jump the following year.....to me, that's probably just a guy going from 24 to 25 to 26 and advancing his game.
Other examples are guys that just have a bad year and bounce back the next year, or guys that move to new place and are hot for a period of time but then settle back to their norm.
Sharp had some solid years putting up goals but never scored more than 36 in a season.
Ray Bourque
This entire thread could be dedicated to Mad Mike Milbury
Roberto Luongo
Olli Jokinen
Todd Bertuzzi
Zdeno Chara
Jason Spezza
Bryan Berard
Brian McCabe
Wade Redden
My Oilers had some horrible giveaways:
Miro Satan
Adam Graves
Canucks had some notable horribad ones:
Mike Peca
Cam Neely
But they also got Marcus Naslund from Pittsburgh, and Todd Bertuzzi from Mad Mike.
Zach Bogosian. I'm not sure if there was a signle Sabres fan who didn't celebrate his departure, and a few moments later he was a very well liked player in Tampa's Cup winning team.
He was getting scratched as a Penguin. That wasn't development, that was escape.
Do we count Hasek then? Wasn’t really around for the start of his career, was never too clear on whether he showed promise/why Chicago dealt him. Then he found greener pastures in Buffalo. Then went for greener pastures still, but that’s kinda a career accomplishment matter.
Do we count Hasek then? Wasn’t really around for the start of his career, was never too clear on whether he showed promise/why Chicago dealt him. Then he found greener pastures in Buffalo. Then went for greener pastures still, but that’s kinda a career accomplishment matter.
By his theory, same could be said about Berard with Ottawa. I guess he never realized both were traded a month after the draft for eachother while Spezza was drafted with the Isles pick from a trade.Spezza and Redden never played for the Islanders so it's hard to argue that being traded to Ottawa was a "change of scenery" that turned their careers around.
My Oilers had some horrible giveaways:
Adam Graves
I seem to identify Marchessault to be in the same vein as Verhaeghe. Marchessault was league minimum guy bouncing around for a while. He took off after being taken by Vegas.
I wonder if there's a few more stories that OP is looking for, for guys taken in the VGK expansion draft.
Devan Dubnyk!
Dubnyk was slowly getting worse for years in Edmonton. Then he bounced around a bit even hitting the AHL and looked like he was out of the league.
He gets traded to a desperate Wild team and starts 38 consecutive games going 27–9–2, making the playoffs when it seemed impossible. That year Dubnyk was 3rd in Vezina voting, 4th in Hart voting, and won a Masterton! He went on to be a workhorse goalie for Minny for the next 4 years, was a 3 time all-star, and started more games than almost anyone league wide while posting great numbers.
You won't find many bigger swings than going from AHL cast off to Vezina and Hart votes after a change of scenery.
False. This narrative needs to die, it's so god damn annoying.
Toronto loved the shit out of Phil Kessel, apart from that dumbass Steve Simmons everyone here loved him. He had 3 consecutive years of 80+ points, going PPG in that span and was a top 5 scoring winger.
It was literally fans of every single other team, telling us how much Kessel sucks, that he's fat and eats hot dogs, that he's 1 dimensional.
There was even a poll done on HF, Hossa vs Kessel, Hossa won in a landslide. 1 week later Kessel was traded, same poll was re-done, Kessel won in a landslide.
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Bonus: Pat Maroon went from fourth line scrapper with the Ducks and Oilers to winning three straight Cups
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Petry to Montreal from Edmonton.
Sure, the fans thought he could be. But, he wasn't and the numbers weren't there. What the fanbase thought wasn't a criteria in the OP. Can't deny that he blossomed in Montreal.Nope. Edmonton fans constantly said he was a top pairing dman. It was every other fanbase that said Edmonton’s defense as a whole was bad so he couldn’t be good.